| + | Ath. 1905, 1: 742. Je. 17. 1280w. |
[*] “The book is delightful enough to stand on its own merits.” H. W. Boynton.
| + | Atlan. 96: 849. D. ‘05. 580w. |
“It is an intimate narrative, but the intimacy is of a highly self-respecting sort, and the picture of the writer which the book leaves upon the reader’s mind is very winning.”
| + | Critic. 47: 476. N. ‘05. 110w. |
“The little volume will create no sensation (heaven forbid!), but it will greatly content a choice few among the readers of books.”
| + + | Dial. 39: 212. O. 1, ‘05. 310w. |
[*] “The letters are truly literature, and every page gives evidence of broad and careful scholarship, wide reading and a soul concerned with high and serious things. As a whole the volume is intensely satisfactory and is one that may be read and read again by those who care to think and know how to think.”
| + + | Educ. R. 30: 530. N. ‘05. 310w. |
“‘The Upton letters’ makes excellent quiet reading for those to whom such a mind as the author’s is attractive.”